Silvia Tennenbaum, 1928 – 2016
We are sad to report that Silvia Tennenbaum passed away at age 88.
The
author of novels and short stories, including the best-seller Rachel
the Rabbi's Wife, Silvia will also be remembered for her bright blue
eyes, her love of the Mets, and her progressive politics. She was smart
and kind and generous. I was sad to get the news that she passed
away this summer.
My
daughters remember Silvia as the smiling writer with the blue
hair. Her hair was lovely and white, but she took to adding a swipe of
bright blue hair color... sassy and unexpected... just like she was.
Silvia Tennenbaum in her studio at VCCA (photo by Lois Lord) |
Silvia
was one of the first Fellows I met at VCCA. She had a long,
wonderful history at Mt. San Angelo where she had been in residence
fifteen times. She first came to VCCA in 1984, and she had great stories
to tell about the early days at VCCA. She loved baseball and would
organize us to go to watch the minor league team in Lynchburg. The team
was called the L-Sox early on, and she talked of watching Darryl
Strawberry play there before he went to the Majors and the Mets. She
continued to attend the ball games when the team became the
Lynchburg Hillcats.
She
also had a deep connection to Lynchburg where she lived from 1951 to 1958 as
the rabbi's wife. Although she talked of moving to Lynchburg at one
point, East Hampton, New York, was home to her.
In
addition to Rachel the Rabbi's Wife, she was the author
of the novel Yesterday's Streets, for which she received
the Goethe Medal of the Hessian Ministry for
Science and Art in 2012. She was touched
by the honor and proud to be fêted in her native Germany which she had fled
when she was ten years old.
In an application to VCCA, she said that her life and work
have been a search for her identity. She said, "I am still trying to chart
the passage, the long road through sunlit landscapes, the melodies of the
languages that compete in my head, the passions unleashed by my exile, my
escape into life." We were happy to have been with her during part
of that search.
Silvia was deeply connected to VCCA. "I love the VCCA more than any other place I've
been", she said in one of her evaluations. It was wonderful to see
the ease with which she entered life here. It was a creative home for
her. Somehow, I always thought she'd be back for another
residency. I'm sorry that I won't be seeing her twinkling blue eyes
again...and the radical blue patch of hair above them.
-Sheila
Gulley Pleasants
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